Claudius Snyder did not push the papers across the desk. He slid them.
The movement was precise, calculated, and devoid of any friction, much like the man himself. His fingers, long and manicured, rested on the edge of the document for a fraction of a second too long before retracting. It was the only sign of hesitation, and if Dylan hadn't spent three years studying his micro-expressions like a survivalist studying a predator, she would have missed it.
The postnuptial amendment sat on the mahogany surface. It was the only thing between them.
The climate control in the penthouse office was set to a rigid sixty-eight degrees. It was always sixty-eight degrees. The cold air bit at the exposed skin of Dylan's shoulders, causing a physiological betrayal she couldn't control. She shivered.
Claudius watched the shiver. His eyes, the color of a stormy Atlantic, narrowed slightly.
Dylan lowered her head. Her hair, a curtain of dark silk, fell forward to obscure her face.
"Is this the final offer?" Dylan asked.
Claudius leaned back in his leather chair. The leather creaked, a sound of expensive authority.
"It is a strategic realignment of assets, Dylan. You know the terms of the trust. This isn't personal."
Not personal. The words hung in the sterile air.
Dylan reached out. Her hand moved across the mahogany, her fingertips grazing the back of Claudius's hand. It was a ghost of a touch, barely there.
Claudius recoiled.
He pulled his hand back as if she were a live wire. The rejection was visceral, immediate, and instinctive. It wasn't just avoidance. It was revulsion.
Perfect.
Dylan picked up the Montblanc pen resting on the document. The weight of it felt good in her hand. Heavy. Substantial. A weapon. She hovered the nib over the signature line.
Claudius frowned. His brow furrowed, creating a single, sharp line between his eyes. He opened his mouth, likely to recite the pre-rehearsed speech about legal counsel and review periods. He was prepared for a negotiation. He was prepared for a fight.
Dylan did the math in her head. One signature equaled fifty million dollars, contingent upon a thirty-day quiet period before filing and the absolute stability of the Snyder Group's voting structure. Any disruption, and the agreement was void. One signature equaled the end of the suffocating dinners, the invasive medical checks, the silent judgment of a dynasty that viewed her uterus as a manufacturing plant.
She pressed the nib to the paper.
The sound was loud in the quiet room. Scritch, scratch. A fluid, decisive loop of ink. There was no hesitation. No shake in her wrist. It was the most confident thing she had done in three years.
Dylan set the pen down. She looked up, blinking rapidly. Her eyes were rimmed with red. The pinch she had given her own thigh under the table five minutes ago was paying dividends.
"I will have my lawyers review the final draft of the non-disclosure agreement," Claudius said, reaching for a folder.
Dylan stood up. The chair scraped against the floor.
"Your team can handle it," she said softly.
She turned her back on him. She walked toward the elevator, her heels clicking a steady rhythm on the marble floor.She looked like a woman who had lost everything.
The elevator doors slid open. She stepped inside and turned to face him one last time. The doors began to close, slicing away the view of Claudius Snyder sitting alone in his glass tower.
The moment the metal doors sealed shut, Dylan's posture collapsed.
But not in grief.
She dropped her shoulders and threw her head back. Her hands curled into fists at her sides.
Yes.
The word was a silent scream of victory.
Back in the office, Claudius felt a sudden, irrational spike of heat in his chest. He picked up the Montblanc pen she had used. He turned it over in his fingers, looking for the warmth of her hand, but the metal was already cold.
Snap.
The sound was sharp. The resin barrel of the pen fractured in his grip. Ink bled onto his thumb, staining the skin black.
A knock sounded at the door. Jensen, his executive assistant, stepped in.
"Sir, the car is waiting for Mrs. Snyder."
Claudius looked at the ink on his hand. He didn't wipe it off.
"Her status is...under review, Jensen. All external communications remain unchanged. Internally, restrict her access. I will handle the board."
Jensen blinked, masking his surprise with a nod.
"Understood, sir."
Down on the street, the Manhattan sun was blinding. It hit Dylan's face like a physical blow, stripping away the artificial chill of the office. She pulled out her personal phone, the burner she had kept hidden in a hollowed-out book for six months.
She dialed.
Zoe picked up on the first ring.
"Tell me you're out," Zoe screamed.
Dylan's voice shifted. The tremble was gone. The softness was gone. It was replaced by a lazy, smoky drawl. It was the voice she used to dismantle corporate raiders, now repurposed for her own liberation.
"Elysium. Tonight. Get the best booth. This is a pressure release valve, Zoe. I need to burn the last three years out of my system."
"Are we mourning the death of a sham marriage?" Zoe asked.
Dylan laughed. It was a dry, sharp sound.
"No. We're celebrating an asset liquidation. I'm cashing out."
A black sedan pulled up to the curb. It was the house car. Sterling, the family butler. Dylan stopped smiling. She slid her sunglasses onto her face, masking her eyes.
She got into the car. The driver glanced at her in the rearview mirror. He tapped his earpiece.
"She looks calm, Mr. Sterling. Very calm."
High above, Claudius stood at the floor-to-ceiling window. He watched the black speck of the car merge into the yellow river of taxis. He rubbed the ink on his thumb, smearing it deeper into his skin.